It has a big, ugly orange sticker covering the Ethernet ports with "RTFM before connecting!!!" written on it. The adhesive is strong, but the sticker itself is not and turns into shreds. It takes forever to rub/pick it off from the matte black plastic surface.
Net neutrality means not discriminating by origin/destination, QoS by packet type (to improve latency) is OK. VoIP and gaming needs low latency and little bandwidth. Torrenting needs large bandwidth but doesn't care about latency. (priority for high bandwidth and low latency stuff like video streaming is between the two). The only thing capping the torrent user should be his subscription's bandwidth/traffic limit. If network congestion is an issue, then: 1. upgrade your network ASAP and 2. behave like a proper network and let the routers drop random packets from the lowest priority traffic. TCP will lower the sending rate if it detects high packet loss/latency.
Fool!
You are not a real g4m3r unless your mouse has at least a dozen removable weights to tune its feel!
http://www.instructables.com/id/Mouse-Mouse!/
Not alive, but it's a start.
WHAT DID YOU SAY???
I CAN'T HEAR YOU!!!
IT'S THE BLIND PEDESTRIAN WARNING SYSTEM OF MY HYBRID!!!
Filter error: Don't use so many caps. It's like YELLING.
I want to yell, you stupid comment filter...
the tendency to singe the paint off cars that approached too close to the exhaust.
A car that automatically enforces the proper following distance? I want one!
Catgirls.
After Windows 8 is released and XP support ends.
Then they will go from touting how many features Linux has over XP to saying how fast it runs compared to Vista.
Yeah, you should develop for the iPhone on Linux or Windows instead.
Whoa, an ASCII screenshot!.
Physical media?
How quaint.
This happens when you combine the Weighted Storage Cube and Alien acid blood.
Duh, hackers are the evil criminals who steal data and make your computer stop working.
The guys working with the government and fighting the criminals are Cyber Warriors.
The Mythbusters did that too:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yRw4ZRqmxOc
(Obviously they scaled it up a bit :))
Well... the myth of... umm...
Ah! The myth of securing wire mesh with Play-Doh of course!
The 10 meters high tornado of fiery death will be a logical follow op for them :)
Oooh... The mentos thing with a flammable liquid instead of coke and dissolved oxygen instead of CO2.....
And this is different from losing the money for that day how?
D-link DIR 300 router, probably others.
It has a big, ugly orange sticker covering the Ethernet ports with "RTFM before connecting!!!" written on it.
The adhesive is strong, but the sticker itself is not and turns into shreds. It takes forever to rub/pick it off from the matte black plastic surface.
"Don't be afraid. It's just a toy."
That is... sad.
Except there is no "taking".
Drawing a centerline on a dirt road with a stick vs. a paved and painted road surface?
You subscribe to a carrier and put the SIM card in your unlocked phone.
At least this is how it works in Europe.
Steve Jobs: The iDevice is perfect, you evolved wrong! :)
Dear [MP name here]
I am [Sender name here] from [Sender city here] and I am writing to you because of:
[10000 characters of stuff, exactly the same that he gets several times every day]
Thank you!
[Sender name here]
Yeah, I'm sure this gets annoying after a while.
So small ISPs are shocked because if they sell X Mb connections they might actually have to let people use X Mb bandwidth? Shocking!
That is not a net neutrality issue!
Net neutrality means not discriminating by origin/destination, QoS by packet type (to improve latency) is OK. VoIP and gaming needs low latency and little bandwidth. Torrenting needs large bandwidth but doesn't care about latency. (priority for high bandwidth and low latency stuff like video streaming is between the two). The only thing capping the torrent user should be his subscription's bandwidth/traffic limit.
If network congestion is an issue, then:
1. upgrade your network ASAP
and
2. behave like a proper network and let the routers drop random packets from the lowest priority traffic. TCP will lower the sending rate if it detects high packet loss/latency.